UN appeals for $4 billion in aid as Syrian humanitarian crisis deepens
- A U.N. humanitarian official has appealed for over $4 billion in aid for 10 million Syrians.
- The Syrian conflict, marking its 13th anniversary, has claimed nearly half a million lives and devastated significant portions of the nation.
- The humanitarian situation has worsened, with 16.7 million Syrians requiring aid, up from 15.3 million the previous year.
A U.N. humanitarian official appealed Friday for more than $4 billion in life-saving aid for more than 10 million Syrians, saying that the country’s largely forgotten crisis remains “one of the most deadly to civilians in the world.”
Adam Abdelmoula, resident coordinator in Syria for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, made the appeal days after Syria marked the 13th anniversary of the conflict that has killed nearly a half million people and left large parts of the country destroyed.
“Today, we are facing an unprecedented situation in Syria — one that we cannot afford to ignore,” Abdelmoula told reporters in Geneva. “Inaction will be costly for all of us and will inevitably lead to additional suffering.”
VIOLENCE IN SYRIA RISES, AID DRIES UP AS CIVIL WAR BEGINS 14TH YEAR
About 16.7 million people require some form of humanitarian assistance in Syria, an increase from 15.3 million last year, he said. Over 7 million people are internally displaced and nearly as many are refugees in other countries, including neighboring Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.
The war has left 90% of Syria’s population below the poverty line as millions face cuts in food aid because of a funding shortfall. The U.N. World Food Program ended its main assistance program in the country in January.
DEADLY DRONE ATTACK HITS TRAINING GROUND AT SYRIAN BASE HOUSING US TROOPS
“The Syria crisis remains one of the most deadly to civilians in the world. Hostilities continue to plague various parts of Syria and have recently seen a sharp spike, especially in the north,” Abdelmoula said.
He suggested that Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza had given cover for more military activity in parts of Syria.
“We saw the world’s attention focusing on Gaza, and that provided some kind of diversion of attention that allowed the significant escalation of hostilities in the northeast without much attention being paid to that situation by the international community,” Abdelmoula said.
Read the full article Here